History & Archaeology

The Saxons, who had been converted to Christianity, conquered the ancient county of Somerset in the 7th Century. Their King was
Ine of Wessex, who was widely regarded as one of the most important figures in the history of the abbey. He was a local man who
boosted the status and income of the abbey, and it is said that he put up a stone church, the base of which forms the west end
of the nave.

This church was enlarged in the 10th century by the Abbot of Glastonbury, St. Dunstan, who became the Archbishop of Canterbury in 960.

In 1066, the wealth of the abbey could not cushion the Saxon monks from the disruption caused by the foreign invasion and subsequent
conquest of England by the Normans.

Skilled Norman craftspeople contributed much to the abbey by adding magnificent buildings to the existing Saxon Church. These
were built to the east of the older church and away from the ancient cemetery.

The Norman betterment of the abbey was extensive. In 1086, when the Domesday Book was commissioned to provide records and a census
of life in England, Glastonbury Abbey was the richest monastery in the country.

The great Norman structures were consumed by fire in 1184 when many of the ancient treasures were destroyed. One story goes, that
in order to raise extra funds from pilgrims to rebuild the abbey the monks, in 1191, dug to find
King Arthur and his Queen Guinevere; and bones from two bodies were raised from
a deep grave in, the cemetery on the south side of the Lady Chapel. These bones were reburied, much later, in 1278 within the Abbey
Church, in a black marble tomb, in the presence of King Edward I.

When the monastic buildings were destroyed in the fire of 1184, the medieval monks needed to find a new place to worship. There
is evidence that the 12th century nave was renovated and used for this purpose for almost 30 years, until some of the work was
completed on the new church. The monks reconsecrated the Great Church and began services there on Christmas Day, 1213, most likely
before it was entirely completed.

In the 14th century, as the head of the second wealthiest abbey in Britain (behind Westminster Abbey), the Abbot of Glastonbury lived
in considerable splendour and wielded tremendous power. The main surviving example of this power and wealth is to be found in the
Abbot's Kitchen - part of the magnificent Abbot's house begun by John de Breynton (1334-42).

Privileged pilgrims might once have stayed in the abbey itself; excavations have disclosed a special apartment at the south end
of the Abbot's house, erected for a visit from the English King, Henry VII.

In 1536, during the 27th year of the reign of Henry VIII, there were over 800 monasteries, nunneries and friaries in Britain.
By 1541, there were none. More than 10,000 monks and nuns had been dispersed and the buildings had been seized by the Crown to
be sold off or leased to new lay occupiers. Glastonbury Abbey was one of principal victims of this action by the King, during the
social and religious upheaval known as the Dissolution of the Monasteries.